Reopening: William Morris Gallery and Gardens, London, from August 2 2012

Five years after coming within a wallpaper’s width of closing, the Walthamstow gallery dedicated to the district’s most influential designer, writer and philosopher, William Morris, is about to reopen to the public.

The Heritage Lottery Fund, who saved the somewhat neglected
19th century building from closure, have described the £10 million
refurbishment – including three new galleries and an education
centre augmented by a £3.7 million orangery-inspired
extension – as one of the most impressive of recent times.

“William
Morris famously said, ‘have nothing in your house that you do not know
to be useful, or believe to be beautiful,’” says Wesley Kerr, the Fund’s
London Committee Chairman, echoing the words of the 19th century
socialist.

“Morris wanted ordinary people to enjoy quality
artefacts – from furniture to stained glass, tapestries to pottery – and
the gallery presents hundreds from a world-class collection, inside an
expanded 18th century mansion which is now full accessible and
expanded.”

The fund gave £1.5 million to the project, matched by
an award from the local council. The space, encompassing a display Kerr
neatly defines as “exquisite objects in a fabulous setting”, has 50
percent more room for its treasures, each shaped by Morris’s work as the
founder of the Arts and Crafts movement which prevailed in Britain at
the start of the 20th century.

His first ever wallpaper and a design for St James’s Palace stand
alongside The Woodpecker (the only tapestry he designed alone) and
masterpieces going by names such as the Beauty and the Beast panel and
the Kelmscott Press Chaucer.

Works of his utopian fiction,
paintings and furniture by contemporaries such as Ford Madox Brown, an
extremely rare fretwork chair inspired by Morris and personal letters
and inscriptions to his nearest and dearest are included.

And
Lloyd Park, the Georgian sprawl of ornamental gardens, Medieval moats
and parkland surrounding the museum, has also been spruced up.

The
opening exhibition is as exciting as the restoration. The Walthamstow
Tapestry, created by Morris devotee Grayson Perry, explores “the
emotional resonance of brand names” and the public’s “quasi-religious
relationship to consumerism”, moving from birth to death on a journey
dotted with brand names, skateboarding, hoovering and shopping. It’s a
prophetic tale partly informed by antique batik fabrics from Malaysia
and eastern European folk art.

“Morris typifies what makes places
like Walthamstow special,” suggests Perry. “A place that most people
think is just an ordinary part of London is actually rich with
interesting people, histories and social and political activity.”

Perry has a studio in Walthamstow, where he designed the work with the Bayeux Tapestry in mind. “But I wanted the title to reflect that it is about all our lives,” he adds. “Walthamstow exemplifies the idea that behind the facade of the average is there so much more.”

The Grade II-listed gallery, on the site of Morris’s family home between 1848 and 1856, contains a total of nearly 600 exhibits across 12 galleries. “I admire him for the range and depth of activity he was able to explore and the lasting influence he has had,” says Perry.

“I love ornate pattern, and that is where Morris excels. His work has a joyous sense of design that provides visual delight and is immediately accessible to everyone. I always hope to achieve similar aims through my work.”

The thoughts of two of the gallery’s patrons, Laurence Llewelyn-Bowen and Tony Robinson, perhaps reveal the depth of feeling Morris’s legacy still fosters.

“He was a major intellectual figure – a socialist whose thinking was rooted in his English sensibility,” says Robinson, calling Morris a “magnificent designer”.

“There has always been a strong radical tradition in Walthamstow, and I think it's particularly appropriate that his life should be celebrated here."

Llewelyn-Bowen believes that even the most stylistically-opposed designers hold admiration for Morris’s “kindly, blokey, romantically British aesthetic”, lauding him as the champion of national style.

“I think the real secret of his universal, timeless appeal is the energetically engaging lack of any whiff of snobbery,” he believes.

“Like some wonderful, noisy, hand-wrought machine, he devoured the raw ingredients of design history and manufactured a look that was so easy to love, so easy to live with that we’ve never been able to surpass it.

“The transformed gallery is the place to immerse yourself in his mind and vision.” Previously imperilled, this idyll of north-east London has had a remarkable turnaround.

Open Wednesday-Sunday 10am-5pm (pre-booked group visits on Tuesday). Admission free.